Lexington wheatfield. (Lexington, Or.) 1905-19??, May 31, 1906, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    I
HE LEXINGTON WHEATFIELD
Published Every Thursday
' at
LEXINGTON, OREGON
S.A.THOMAS,
Editor and Proprietor.
OFFICIAL PAPER TOWN OF LEXINGTON
Subscription, per year, - $1.00
Advertising rates on Application
Entered as second-class matter October
6, 1905, at the post office at Lexington, Or
egon, under the Act cf Congress of March
3, 1879,
THURSDAY MAY 31, 1906.
REPUBLICAN TICKET
For U S Senator (short term)
F. W. MULKEY
For U. S. Senator (regular term)
JONATHAN BOURNE, Jr.
For Congress 2nd Dist.
W. R. ELLIS
For Governor .
JAMES WITHYCOMBE.
For Secretary of State
FRANK W. BENSON
For State Treasurer
GEO. A. STEEL
For Supreme Judge
ROBERT EAKIN
For Attorney General
A. M. CRAWFORD .
For Supt. Public Instruction
J. H. ACKERMAN
For State Printer
W. S. DUNNIWAY
For Labor Commissioner
0. P. HOFF
For Circuit Judge
H. J. BEAN
For State Senator
W. G. COLE
For Representative
W. M..SLUSHER
For Sheriff
E. M SHUTT
For County Clerk
W. 0. HILL
PROHIBITION TICKET.
For Joint Representative:
H. C. GAY.
For Commissioner:
J. J. ADKINS.
For County Treasurer:
W. P. SCRIVNER
For Coroner:
J. L. YEAGER.
THE DAIRYMN'S OPPORTUNITY. '
Cream is being shipped into Port
land from California, Utah and Idaho,
to be made into butter. Of course, It
Is easy to understand why the farmers
ship cream such great distances.
fcawiiTS
OREGON
HOjgfLlNE
AND
--T0
Salt Lake, Denver, Kansas
City, Chicago, St- Louis,
New York.,
Ocean Steamer for Hmifrmicldco leuve
Portland at 8 P. M. every Hfth day.
Hazelwood and other butter manufac
turers are building up a big butter
trade and they have to get sufficient
cream to supply that demand. They
pay for cream on the basis of the sell
ing price of first-class butter, which
gives the dairymen a chance to dis
pose of their product on a market that
makes their dairies profitable.
Our farmers are overlooking a great
opportunity if they do not take advant
age of the chance that will soon be of
fered them at the home creamery.
The demand for cream is increasing
all the time, and is steady everyday in
the year. Every farmer should invest
in good, cream producing cows, and
build up a herd that will be a constant
and steady source of income. The
price paid for cream is bound to earn
a big profit for the dairyman as cream
Is now bought on the basis 'of the sell
ing price of butter into which it is
made. With this butter bringing a
price that makes it profitable for dairy
men to ship cream one thousand
miles, it certainly assures the dairy
men of Morrow county a greater profit.
Dairying will do more for this coun
try in the long run than any other
branch of agriculture. The check for
the cream comes every month, and
there's no such thing as crop failure.
A dairy community is independent of
hard times. People must and will
have butter, and they will pay more
for fresh, pure butter than they will
pay for ordinary butter. The dairyman
gets the benefit of this as the cream
ery gets the highest price for butter.
Get two or three cows and be ready
for the creamery when it Is ready to
start in. Feed the skim milk to the
pigs, or feed It sour to the chickens.
Keep the promising heifer calves and
build up your herd. Send the steers
and unprofitable cows to the butcher.
Raise your own forage crops and feed
everything you raise. Your farm will
Increase in fertility and value. Invest
your money in good cream producing
cows and you will be growing rich and
Independent.
Sciatica Cured After Twenty Years of
Torture.
For more than twenty years Mr. J.
B. Massey, of 3322 Clinton St.,
Minneapolis, Minn., was" tortured by
Sciatica. The pain and suffering
which he endured during this time is
beyond comprehesion. Nothing gave
hint any permanent relief nufll he used
Chamberlain's Pain Balm. One ap
plication of that liniment relieved .the
pain and made sleep and rest possible,
and less than one bottle has effected a
permanent cure. ' If troubled with
sciatica or rheumatism why not try a
25-cent bottle of Pain Palm and see
for yourself how quickly it relieves the
pain. For sale by W. P McMillan.
STOCKHOLM MKJbTINrt
nuiiv io iiicujf givdi mat a uiwvt-
Ing of the stockholders of the Lexing
ton Creamery Association will be held
JLl kCtlUIUCtJT, JU11C UV, 17W, III 111
city hall, in Lexington, Oregon, at 1
- ' ! I- -
U fclUUH p 111.
' W. E. Leach,
Temporary Secretary.
Tlekti to and from all point of the Unit
ed States and Kuroue.
Trains Leave Lexington, Daily, ex
cept Sunday, - vo a. m
Trains Arrive at Lexington,- Daily, ex
cept Sunday - 5:10 P. M.
Trains Connect at Heppner Junction
with Main Line trains for all
points East and West.
A. L. CRAIG, G. P. A.
HAD A CLOSK CALL
"A dangerous surgical operation, in
volving the removal of a malignant ul
cer, as lajge as my hand, from my
daughter's hip, was prevented by the
application of Bucklen's Arnica Salve,"
sass A, C. Stickel, of Miletus, W. Va.
"Persistent use of the Salve complete
ly curkd it." Cures Cuts, Burns and
Injurses, 25c at W. P.. McMillan's.
fill WvMLtll9 ' irJAx I llI'M
J " :
O
HARDWARE
We have a complete line of hard
ware consisting of a full line of Gran
iteware in all cooking utensils, also
tinware. Before purchasing a stove
come and see the Charter Oak.
0
Men's and Boys Golf and Negligee Shirts, all sizes, new and up-to-date.
Many different styles to choose from and we make you special prices.
Ladies Linen Dusters, come and see them before buying material to make
O ne. They are just what you need in the dust.
Ladie's muslin gowns, neatly trimmed with tucks, insertion and embroidery
bpecial prices 90cents to $1.75.
O Muslin Skirts trimmed with lace and embroidery
O
Special price $1.25 to $3.50
o
We save you money, our expenses are small, we buy careful and look . after
the wants of our customers.
o
f" a
ETT & CO.
o
LEXINGTON,
OREGON 2
FAMOUS STRIKE BREAKERS
The most famous strike breakers In
the land are Dr. King's New Life Pills.
When liver and bowels go on a strike,
they xuickly settle the trouble, and the
purifying work goes right on. Best cure
for constipation, headache' and dizzi
ness. 25c at W. P. McMillan's.
Boost Lexington the best town in
Morrow county.
Not If an Rich as Rockefeller.
If you had all the wealth of Rocke
feller, the Standard Oil magnate, you
could not buy a better medicine for
bowel complaints than Chamberlain's
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy.
The most eminent physician can not
prescribe a better preparation for colic
and diarrhoea, both for children and
sdults. The uniform success of this
remedy has shown it to be superior to
all others. It never fails, and when
reduced with water and sweetened, Is
pleasant to take. Every family should
be supplied with it. Sold by W. P.
McMillan.
..THE PASTIME
9 J, V. GRIMES, Proprietor.
ZZIIIXIIIXIZXZIIXIilKIIXIKXXZ-IKXIIieiXZIXXIlZXIIIIZZ
w
M
' M
M
M
w
K
(JAND1ES, HUTS,. FRUITS, CIGARS, TO- ft
BACCO, SOFT DRINKS, POOL AND
- BILLIARDS.
BACCO, SOFT DRINKS, POOL AND 8
- BILLIARDS. jj
H M
fi Lexington, - - - "Oregon l
iizzzzxizxzzzzzzixzzzazzzzazzzzarzzzarzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
THEM.W. OF A. Excelsior Camp.
No. 9873, meet in Artisan Hall every
4th Tuesday night of the month.
E. E. Thomas. F. F. Klitz,
Clerk. V.C.
LEXINGTON f
FLOUR MILLf
& JOS, BURGOYNE, Proprietor 0
ju Manufacturers of , A
Flour . Graham Flour A
Whole Wheat Flour 9
1 Rolled Barley - Mill Feed
Rolled Wheat , f
I LEXINGTON, - - - OREGON
I X L SALOON
J. R CHAPMAN & CO., Props
NES, LIQUORS
D CIGARS.
FRESH BEER ALWAYS ON DRAUGHT
o GOOD POOL TABLE IN CONNECTION
LEXINGTON, OREGON
I JOHN B. WHITE
t GENERAL BLACKSMITHING
$1 HORSESHOEING A SPECIALTY
V 1
Work Neatly Executed Charges Reasonable ,
LEXINGTON, OREGON. ,
&4.4.4.4,4.4.4,4. 4 4 4 a44, 44 a 44,